2024-05-28
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Hi, John Priddo here.
I host Checks and Balance, our podcast on US politics.
Welcome to Editors Picks.
Here's an article from the latest edition of The Economist,
handpicked by our team and read aloud.
I hope you enjoy it.
In 1994 South Africa provided some of the most joyous scenes of the late 20th century when it elected Nelson Mandela as its first black president.
More or less peaceful transition from apartheid to multiracial democracy demonstrated what can happen when political enemies show courage and imagination.
Yet as our briefing this week explains, 30 years later,
the question is whether South Africa's hard-won democracy can reverse the country's perilous decline.
After a creditable first decade, Mandela's African National Congress, or ANC,
has presided over economic stagnation, rampant crime,
failing public services and epic corruption.
Most South Africans say they would do away with elections
if an unelected government could provide safety,
jobs and housing.